Wednesday, 2 April 2014

Before I begin, I would like to emphasise
that what I am about to say is only a
hypothesis. I am not saying that
this is what happened. I am not even suggesting that this is the most likely
thing to have happened. I am merely putting it forward as one of the possible
solutions, one that I have not as yet come across being discussed on the net.

Just like plenty of other people, I have
been interested in the “mystery” of the missing Malaysian Airlines Flight MH
370. If you’re reading this at all, you’ll be aware of the basics, so I won’t
go into them in detail for you. If you aren’t familiar with the details – such
as they are – you might want to read this first.

I haven’t written about it earlier, and
only tangentially referred to it on my comic strip. For the record, I have from the outset, as I still do now, discounted all
the outré hypotheses – which I do not dignify with the term “theory”. I do not,
accordingly, believe that the plane is hidden in a cave in Kazakhstan after
being hijacked by Chinese Taliban. I do not believe it’s in Tel Aviv being
readied for a suicide attack on the US to be blamed on Iran and provoke an
invasion a la Baghdad. I do not believe little green monsters from the
Andromeda galaxy came along and abducted everyone.

Of course, there must be a solution to the “mystery”.
Even if the plane is missing, it must be somewhere,
mustn’t it? It can’t just have dematerialised? So why, despite all the searching, haven't they found it yet?Simple answer: they aren't looking in the right place.If the plane exists, after all, and they were looking in the right place, they'd at least have found something by now.

And it does exist, or at least its
component parts do exist. As to where these component parts are, I believe they
are under the Pacific Ocean, somewhere off the southern coast of Vietnam. And I believe the Malaysian authorities, and
perhaps those of other nations as well, have known this from the start.
They know where the plane is, and they do not
want it to be found.

Why would they not want the plane found?
What possible reason can there be?

There is only one explanation: there is
something about that wreckage which would prove at least deeply embarrassing,
and perhaps dangerous, if it were to be retrieved and examined.

Obviously, if the plane had simply crashed – at about
the time it vanished from the radar screens or afterwards – there would be no
reason to fear the wreckage being retrieved and examined.

Nor, if the plane had been destroyed by a
terrorist bomb, say, would there have been any reason not to retrieve and
examine the wreckage.

There is only one set of circumstances
under which the authorities would not want the aeroplane to be found: if their defence forces had deliberately
shot it down.

I understand that this might be a somewhat
startling statement, so let me sketch a scenario.

The plane, MH 370, is flying at night over
the southern reaches of the South China Sea. To those who don’t know, the South China
Sea is of some interest geopolitically these days, since islands in it are
claimed by the Philippines, China, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam – some of
them by all of them. And with the
Empire’s “pivot to Asia,” United States Navy ships are present on it as well.
In other words, it isn’t a flight over a silent sea. Tensions are high, that's what I mean.

Then, at some point, after breaking off
contact with Malaysian air control and before contacting Ho Chi Minh City
control in Vietnam, something goes wrong on the plane. Perhaps it’s an electric
fire, as suggested here. Perhaps it’s something else, something that makes the
plane deviate from its course. And this deviation isn’t noticed by civilian
radar, but it brings the airliner into airspace where someone else detects it
on a radar screen; someone who decides to shoot first and ask questions later.

It’s night, there’s no time for such fancy
things as a visual confirmation. Perhaps an attempt or two is made to contact
the plane without result. Perhaps the mishap on the plane has knocked out some
of the radio equipment or perhaps the messages are simply not sent on the
correct frequency. And maybe the somebody
I mentioned isn’t particularly concerned about making contact anyway.

So there’s a flash of a missile in the
darkness, an explosion in the air, and a spiralling mass of flame tumbling into
the ocean. Disaster.

Could it have happened? Recent history
tells us that not only could it have happened, it has happened several times.
Yes, several times, quite genuine and unmistakable civilian airliners have been
shot down by military forces; and probably the worst single incident of them
all was the destruction of Iran Air Flight 655 by the American guided missile Aegis cruiser USS
Vincennes over the Persian Gulf in 1988.

I won’t waste space on a discussion of the
destruction of Iran Air Flight 655; you can read all about it at the link.
But the salient points are as follows: on
3rd July 1988, the aeroplane was flying over the Persian Gulf on a
flight from Bandar Abbas in Iran to Dubai. It was following its correct flight
path and was still well inside Iranian airspace when the Vincennes, an American cruiser which had knowingly and illegally
entered Iranian territorial waters, shot it down with two surface to air
missiles, killing all 290 on board.

The Vincennes
claimed that it had mistaken the large, commercial Airbus A300, which was on a
scheduled flight and was climbing to cruising altitude, for an F 14 strike
aircraft diving to attack. This was despite the fact that two other American ships
in the vicinity correctly identified the aeroplane for what it was. The Vincennes claimed that it had attempted
to contact the “intruder” on military radio frequencies, which the commercial
Airbus would naturally not be monitoring. And then it went ahead and shot down
the aeroplane.

Remember that this was in broad daylight,
in one of the busiest parts of the world in terms of air and sea traffic – and it still happened.

For anyone else but the Empire, the fallout
would have been horrifying. For the Empire, it was nothing like that. George HW
Bush declared, as I remember, “I will never apologise for the United States. I don’t care what the facts are.” But
even so, the Empire hid the facts as long as possible and only years later reluctantly
admitted that not only was the Iranian aeroplane within its own territorial
limits, the Vincennes had been intruding into them as well.

But this is not 1988 and Malaysia is not
the Empire. And even the Empire wouldn’t want to alienate potentially vital
allies in its Asian Pivot by shooting one of their planes out of the sky.

Now I’m not saying this happened. But just
suppose the MH 370 was shot down and the government, in order to limit the
fallout, decided to try and cover it up. What might it do?

Well, how about not just pretending
ignorance, but deliberately misleading
the searchers and pointing them in the wrong direction? How about, say, obfuscating,
dissembling, and fiddling with the transcripts of the radio conversations with the crew to throw suspicion
on them, however temporarily? How about claiming the plane had flown in a
direction that would have taken it far away from where it went down...even to
another ocean? How about a highly publicised hunt, in a place where the plane
was guaranteed not to be?

Isn't all this familiar when you consider the Malaysian government's behaviour? In fact, can any other hypothesis explain the Malaysian government's behaviour?

The government can claim to be doing all it can. The
media can be kept busy covering the mystery of a disappearance which is no
mystery. It’s embarrassing, sure, and raises a fair amount of ill will, but
nothing to that which would have happened if it became known that one’s own
army or the navy of one’s ally destroyed the aircraft by carelessness or psychopathy.

And meanwhile, the wreckage settles into
the sea bed, and one only has to wait for the power supply to the transponders
and the black boxes to run out. One is buying precious time, and there are only
a few more days to go. The power supply lasts just thirty days, after all.Later, after the hunt is over and the world has moved on, the wreckage might quietly be retrieved and disposed of, if possible and safely doable. Later.

Perhaps – even likely – I am wrong. Perhaps
the wreckage will be discovered in the southern Indian Ocean tomorrow, or the
plane will turn up in Diego Garcia. Perhaps a UFO will materialise above
Beijing and disgorge the aircraft, passengers and all.

Or perhaps I’m right, and if so, we shall
not only likely never know what happened on this occasion, but things like this
may happen more frequently in future.

After all, if you’ve got away with it once,
why couldn’t you get away with it again...and again...and again?

I hope I’m wrong...but the more I think
about it, the less likely it is that I am.

Tuesday, 1 April 2014

Rarely do I post anything on here which is
not by me, but today I’m making an exception.

This is an extremely important article,
which seems to have passed beneath everyone’s radar. I did not find any mention
of it on the main news sites.

I’d urge everyone to maintain caution about
the urge to support one side or another completely and absolutely in the
developing Cold War II, because, as this article – if it is factual – shows, neither side has its hands clean. While
the article is so far unconfirmed by sources elsewhere, I don’t necessarily discount
the very serious allegations it
makes. Please do not assume that I am endorsing the contents of this piece.
However, if it is true, then in the competing land grab operations underway in
the former USSR, Russia is fortifying itself and readying for an open showdown
with the West. Unless one side or the other backs down at some point, weare
almost certainly going to be faced with nuclear war.

In accordance with the source site’s
permissions, I’m only publishing part of the original article, with a link to
the rest of the piece.

All I ask is that you keep an open mind.

Russia Invades Durakistan

BY KAY PEETU AND KEJI CHAMATTHU

MOSCOW Tue 1 April 2014, 1202 pm IST

(Rueters) – As the United States and Russia
face off over the future of Crimea and Ukraine, and all attention is focussed
on Eastern Europe, the world media have apparently missed very significant
developments far away, in Central Asia.

According to sources on the ground, and confidential information from officials
in the Russian military and government, last night, at midnight local time, the
Russian Tenth Army, supported by independent armoured regiments, invaded the
former Soviet Republic of Durakistan. As columns of T 80 and T 90 tanks, followed
by armoured personnel carriers and self-propelled artillery, slashed across the
northern border, elite Russian Spetsnaz forces heli-dropped into the capital,
Choknutiy, and quickly secured the airport, the parliament building,
presidential palace, and all major institutions. President Bezumnii Glupostayev
and his entire cabinet seem to have been taken into custody. There was no
resistance as the Russian invasion took the country’s tiny and unprepared
forces completely by surprise.

This image, which cannot be independently verified, claims to show Russian tanks in Durakistan

“I heard helicopters flying low overhead in
the middle of the night,” a Choknutiy resident who wanted to remain anonymous
told Rueters over Skype. “There was panic and confusion in the streets, with
people wondering if there had been a coup. By dawn, we saw masked foreign soldiers in
the street, passing by in armoured vehicles. They did not respond to questions
but were dressed in Russian uniform.”

This photo, provided by activists, claims to show Russian soldiers in Choknutiy

Asked about the current situation in the
capital, the resident said that it was relatively calm but tense. “The Russians
have taken over the police and the government. They’ve imposed martial law but
not made any official announcement about it. The shops are all closed and
people aren’t on the streets.”

Another informant, who wishes to be known
only by his first name, Zhopa, claims to have been a soldier in the Duraki
army. He told Rueters that he was on guard duty at the frontier when the
Russian columns went past. “There was no firing,” he said, over the telephone. “They
smashed the border barriers with a tank and just moved in. Some soldiers came
to our post and disarmed us, after which we were allowed to go.”

With the total absence of resistance and
the swift occupation of the capital, Durakistan seems to have been an easy
conquest for Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

The smallest and poorest of the former
Soviet republics, Durakistan lies between Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and
Tajikistan. It was a part of Uzbekistan before breaking away in the 1995-6
civil war, which ended in the territory gaining de facto independence. It is
still desperately poor, and, lacking any international recognition, receives no
foreign aid.

Map of Central Asia, showing Durakistan in purple

“Why would Putin want to invade Durakistan?”
Professor Vsyo Znaetov, Durakistan expert at New York’s prestigious Academy for
Central Asian Studies, spoke to this writer. “Well, for one thing, it’s part of his
long-term strategy to reassert Russian influence in Central Asia. Durakistan’s
situation – sandwiched as it is between the
three former Soviet Republics – makes it a very attractive staging point for
military domination in any direction. If tensions rise in Central Asia, Putin
can act before any outside powers can step into the breach.”

There is also, Professor Znaetov, said, the
question of resources. “Though dirt-poor, Durakistan sits above possibly the
world’s single largest bubble of natural gas. Controlling it gives Putin a powerful
bargaining chip to use in strengthening Russia’s hand internationally.” China
and India are believed to be interested consumers, Professor Znaetov said, and
likely knew of the invasion in advance.

Rueters asked Professor Znaetov what justification
Putin might have for this action, since unlike Crimea, Transdniestria, South Ossetia
or Abkhazia, Durakistan does not have a significant Russian population.

“Most people can’t find Durakistan on a map
anyway,” Znaetov replied. “Even the State Department, in all probability, has
little knowledge of the place. Almost certainly, there will be no international
storm over it at all. And if Russia begins selling Duraki gas, the local
economy might improve to the point where the majority of the people may begin
to accept Russian domination. Then, if anyone raises questions, Putin can say
he was acting in the best interests of the Durakis themselves. President
Glupostayev was in any case unpopular and implicated in massive corruption, so
few mourn his ouster.”

President Bezumnii Glupostayev, who is believed to be in Russian custody

Professor Znaetov also had a comment about
a possible quid pro quo with the US. “Putin,”
he said, “has probably reached an understanding with the US. In return for
staying out of Eastern Ukraine, he will be allowed to take over Durakistan.
Russia likely doesn’t want the problems which will come with the rusting
industrial belt of Eastern Ukraine anyway, with its ethnic mix and economic and
social tensions. On the other hand, Durakistan is a far easier territory to
control and offers Putin many more benefits.”

As proof of his idea of a quid pro quo, Znaetov offered the fact
that the media have completely blacked out the news of the Russian invasion. “You
won’t hear about it even on the most shrilly anti-Russian news networks,” he
said. “This is inconceivable, unless the government has ensured that the news
stays under wraps.”

The danger, Znaetov says, lies afterwards. “While
the occupation of Durakistan is a fait
accompli, the problem arises if Putin or some future Russian leader has a
reason to intervene in one of the other Central Asian nations. Since he now has
a base for such an intervention to be performed rapidly and successfully, he
might be tempted into rash behaviour which may in turn bring him into conflict
with the West. It might be in the best interests of both sides to declare
Central Asia off limits to everyone.”

Rueters also spoke to a State Department
official who wished to remain anonymous since he was not authorised to speak to
the media. He denied any claim of a cover up. “Durakistan doesn’t even exist as far as we’re concerned,” he
said. “But assuming it did, we totally deny it has been invaded by anybody. And
even assuming it had been invaded, we totally deny clamping down on the media
about it.”

Sunday, 30 March 2014

This story was partly inspired by one of my favourite power metal songs of all time, Badlands by Metal Church.

The night
was completely dark when he awoke.

His chin had been resting on his chest, and
the muscles of his neck were cramped and aching, He had not meant to sleep, but
it had been far too long since the last time he’d closed his eyes, longer than
he remembered. The exhaustion was creeping up, but he couldn’t stop now.

He shook his head and squeezed his eyes
shut till lights flashed behind his eyelids, and then opened them again. The
darkness was still absolute. There was the faint noise of the beast’s hooves on
the ground, but no other noise either.

He wondered how long he’d slept, and what
had been happening while he’d been sleeping.

He knew what he had to do, and he did not
want to do it. He resisted as long as he could, till he could resist no longer.

And then he called his demon, and his demon
came to him.

“You took long enough to call me,” it said,
walking by his side.

He looked at the demon from the corner of
his eye without replying. Tonight, it had chosen to look like a woman of sorts,
her naked body bright red and glowing faintly. Huge horns sprouted above her
ears and curled past her jaw, and her eyes were amber and feral. It wasn’t by any means the first time his
demon had decided to look like a woman. But at least it wasn’t trying to tempt
him tonight by looking like someone he would want to sleep with.

“Well?” the demon-woman demanded. Her tail
moved, the barbed tip slapping against the flank of the beast, but it didn’t
notice. “What do you want to ask?”

He thought for a moment before he spoke.
“Where are we? Am I lost?”

The demon stared at him. “You shouldn’t
have fallen asleep, Man.” As she flicked her flaming hair back over her
shoulders, sparks flashed from her hands and spiralled away into the darkness.
“You aren’t lost. Lost doesn’t even begin
to describe where you are.”

“You brought me here,” he said with
complete certainty. “I’m not here just by chance. You brought me here.”

The demon didn’t say anything for a bit.
Her feet and the beast’s hooves hushed through the dust.

“Have you ever thought of where you’re
going?” she asked at last.

He was taken aback at the question. “Of
course. It’s all I ever think about.”

“It’s been a long journey, hasn’t it?” She
glanced at him under an arched eyebrow. “Do you even remember how long it’s
been?”

“Of course I do. It’s...” he stopped
abruptly. He tried to remember, but couldn’t. “It’s just...”

The demon was looking at him with open
amusement now. “And do you recall a time before
the journey began?”

She rested one taloned hand on his thigh.
The nails were so sharp he felt their touch through his chain mail.

“Just a little thing,” she said. “A little
matter of putting a wrong to right.” She laughed, the noise like crystals
splitting. “Or a right to wrong, depending on your point of view.”

Something screeched in the darkness, far
away. The noise was like nothing he’d ever heard.

“What was that?” he asked.

The noise came again, from another
direction. There was no way of telling just how far away it was. His hand
instinctively went over his shoulder to touch the sword on his back. But there
was nothing to draw the sword against.

“Don’t worry about it,” the demon said, her
fingers still digging into the chain mail on his thigh. “It’s nothing you need
to worry about.” She smiled, her teeth like daggers. “What you need to worry
about comes later.”

“When?”

“In the morning,” she said. “It’s not that
far away, the morning.”

**********************

There was
something in the sky, circling.

He tilted his head back, squinting. The sky
was the colour of burnished steel, and it was almost impossible to make out
anything in the glare. He could just make out something with wings. There were
at least three of them, and they did not seem to be birds.

“Demon,” he said. “Demon.”

“They’re just watching.” The demon still
had her hand on his thigh, and her fingers clenched slightly. Not much, just
enough to remind him of what her claws could do. “Don’t look at them, Man.”

He shook his head and rubbed his eyes. The
yellow stony desert on all sides and the metallic sky above gave no relief.
Only in the distance before them, where a rising line of eroded brownish-pink
cliffs rose like broken teeth, was there any sign of any change in the
topography.

The beast plodded on, uncaring. Its horned
head nodded back and forth above its heavy muscular shoulders. He had often
wondered what the beast thought and dreamed, inside its human head. Nothing
seemed to ever matter to it. He wonder what it had ever done to become what it
was now, and whether it was content. He wondered if it was being punished or
rewarded.

The beast couldn’t answer these questions and the demon wouldn’t.

“We’re going up that way,” the demon said.
Even in the eye-aching light, her skin glowed red, her naked body not seeming
to feel the heat. “Up into the hills there.”

“And when we get there?”

“When we get there, Man,” she said, her barbed
tail swishing, “we shall do what we came to do.”

From long experience, he knew he wouldn’t
get anything more out of her for the time being. When he turned back to look at
the cliffs they were suddenly much closer. Stones clicked and clattered away from
the beast’s hooves.

A shadow fell across the beast’s shoulders
and the rock path and as quickly disappeared. He looked up quickly, but just
too late to see anything.

“Don’t look up, Man.” There was an edge to
the demon’s voice. “Keep your head down.”

There were times, he’d learned, when he
could defy the demon, but this wasn’t one of them. He kept his eyes fixed on
the beast’s shoulders while the shadows returned, each time closer. He thought
he could make out noises, just too faint to hear.

As they entered the hills, the beast’s
steps grew slower and unsure, and he could feel it deciding before placing each
foot. He looked to the side and saw nothing but sky. They were travelling along
the edge of a cliff so high he could not see the desert beneath – if there was
any desert to be seen.

“Isn’t it time you told me what this is
about?” he asked the demon.

“We’ll come to a village in a little bit,”
she replied. “It’s got an...infestation. Your job, Man, is to clear it out.”

“Ghouls or vampires wouldn’t need you to
handle them, Man,” she snapped with undisguised contempt. “You’ll know it when
you see it.”

The path twisted away from the cliff edge,
and he no longer saw the sky.

*************************

“That?” he asked, superfluously.

“That,” the demon confirmed.

He stared at the gate, fighting down the
urge to reach for the sword. Even the beast hesitated a moment in its plodding.
The structure filled the path before them, like an open, hungry mouth. From the
wooden crosspiece and posts, fanged skulls peered down at them with empty eye
sockets. From beyond the sagging barrier of bone lashed with sinew, something
that might have been smoke stained the air.

“And there’s a village inside?” he asked at
last.

“There was
a village inside,” the demon said. “Now there’s, well, let’s go in and see.”

Swallowing to loosen the tension in his
throat, he pressed his knees to the beast’s side. The creature swung its horned
head round to confirm that this was what he wanted. That was the first time the
beast had ever, in all the time he’d been on it, hesitated about anything. And
that made him very uneasy.

“Go,” said the demon. So they went.

*************************

“You know what did this?” the demon asked.

He did not answer. He was looking at the
buildings on either side of the street. They seemed to have been ripped out
from the inside. Blood and soot marked the walls. There were no people to be
seen, or indeed anything living. The faint tinge of smoke still lingered on the
air.

There was a smell, though. A smell he
remembered, from a very, very long time ago.

“I don’t know,” he said, though he knew.

“I think you do.” The demon’s hand fell
away from his thigh. “And you know why I brought you here.”

Without replying, he swung himself off the
beast’s back. It was a long time since his feet had touched the ground, and he
could not afford to be unsteady on his legs. “What did they do?” he asked. “The
people? What did they do to deserve this?”

“Nothing.” The demon shook her head, and
her hair danced like fire. “They didn’t have to do anything. Just being is enough.”

He thought about that a moment, and nodded.
“How do I stop them?” It would have to be him, of course. The demon was powerless
to help in this instance.

“No –“ he began, and then he could hear
them too. A high, singing noise, at the threshold of hearing, almost like
music. Almost, but no quite.

“I can’t look at them,” he said. “Can I?”

“You can, here. Outside, they would have
burned you. Here, it will be as sport to them to face you. And, so close, they
do not burn.”

He pulled on his gauntlets and reached over
his shoulder.

“You had better be swift, Man,” the demon
said.

*************************

The sword
was of a metal so old that it no longer had a name. It lay, as always, heavy in
his hand, so heavy that it felt that he could never use it for anything. And
then, as always, when he raised his arm, it suddenly became an extension of his
body, black as the gulfs between the stars and hard and bright as starlight
itself.

There was a knife, too, in the top of his
boot, an ordinary knife, of old, polished steel. He hoped he would not have to
use it. If things came to the point where he had to depend on the knife, he
would probably be beyond help.

“Wait,” the demon said. “Before you
go...there’s this much I can do for you.” She scraped at her breasts with her
talons. Golden-orange blood welled, and she wiped her fingers across his brow
and down his cheeks.

“It won’t help you defeat them,” she said.
“But it will give you a measure of protection – for a while.”

He tried to smile to show his thanks, but
the smile would not come. Turning, he trudged away down the street, his
armoured feet heavy in the dust.

He saw the blood trail on the ground before
he’d taken twenty steps. It led to the left, down a side street, and was still
so fresh that when his boot touched it the blood smeared. He followed it till
it ended abruptly at the foot of a wall in a little pool. A drop fell into it,
with a tiny ripple. He looked up.

It squatted on the wall, looking down at
him. A few of its wings held a human figure between them, twisted and tore at
it absently, while its lion face leered.

“So,” it said. Its voice sounded like old,
rusty machinery, as though it wasn’t used to talking. “A knight, of all things. Why have you come?”

His lips moved, numbly. “Because I wanted
to.”

“Did you want to join in the fun?” Those of
its wings which held the body raised it a little to give a better view. “It can
be arranged.”

“No,” he said. “I came to stop you.”

“Stop
us?” The thing laughed. Its fangs were stained with dried gore. “You think you can stop us? That anything can?”

“That’s why I came. If I didn’t know I
could stop you I wouldn’t have come.”

“We’ve been watching you,” the thing said.
The tongue of its ox head licked at the blood on one wing. “All alone on that
beast of yours, plodding up the trail We were wondering where you were headed,
but we didn’t think you’d be stupid enough to come...here.”

All
alone? Either they hadn’t seen the demon or it was
mocking him. “Why are you doing this?” he asked.

“Why not? It’s fun, and they deserved it.”
It bent its lion head to stare at him. “As I am sure you deserve, too. Begone, before I look too deep into you.”

He stood his ground. “Where are the rest of
the people?” he asked. “Did you kill them all?”

“There are a few left.” The thing motioned
with its eagle’s head, to the side. “If you would join them, and their fate,
they are to be found there.”

He looked in the direction the thing had
indicated. The building was of yellow stone, with rough unfinished walls and
narrow high windows.

“And if I join them,” he said, “then what?”

“Then, knight,” the thing said, and laughed
with all four of its heads. “Then, knight, the fun begins.”

*************************

The
building was higher than he had thought, and the walls were so thick that the
windows were set deep into them, like sunken eyes. When he stood close to the
wall he could hear noises inside, like a multitude sighing and crying.

Shadows began circling above. Now he knew
what they were. Ignoring them, he began walking round the building, looking for
a way in.

There was just one door. He found it after
walking almost completely round the structure. It was huge, almost twice his
height, and of wood the colour of iron, set with immense iron spikes. But when
he pushed at it with his gauntlet, it swung open silently.

Inside, he stopped, blinking. And despite
all he’d seen over the unending years of the journey, he couldn’t hold back a
gasp of shock.

The yard was a pile of corpses. Some of
them were dead. A lot more were only half dead. And another of the things
squatted on the pile, grinning.

“A knight,” it said, from its human head.
The head was of a very beautiful woman. “How very pleasant.”

“Told you so,” a voice said from behind and
above. He resisted the temptation to look back. It would be the first one,
which had been sitting on the wall and must now be crouching on the roof above
the yard. “Great fun, isn’t it? He wants to stop
us.”

“Of course he will,” the woman’s head said.
The clawed wing meditatively picked at a body, which was still not quite dead. “Of course he will.”

“Just what we needed, a knight to play with,”
the one behind him said. “I was getting quite bored.”

He glanced quickly round the yard, trying
not to look at the corpses, which had been made corpses in imaginatively gruesome
ways. It was lined by narrow windows, and he saw movement behind some of them.
A hand, small as a child’s, waved frantically.

“I thought knights were supposed to be on our side,” the woman-headed thing said
in mock complaint. “Aren’t we supposed to be the good ones?”

“I’m on the side of justice,” he said. “Whatever
that is, this isn’t justice.”

“Ah, but it’s fun.” The woman-headed thing stretched some of its wings. Its body
glowed bright beneath them, so bright that it was difficult to look at it. “It’s
so much fun that you –“

It did not say anything more. It did not
say anything more because the sword of nameless metal had sliced deep into its
body just below the head. It merely tumbled over backward, thrashed a little,
and died.

He had not meant to attack before he actually struck, and that was what had helped him. If he’d thought about it, he’d have
been slower, and the thing would almost certainly have known. He’d reacted
entirely on instinct, and he’d won.

For the moment.

Even as the woman-headed thing thrashed in
its final spasms, he’d thrown himself down and to the side, and just in time.
The one behind him was already hurtling down, too swiftly to stop or manoeuvre.
It rushed past above his head just as he hit the ground and rolled over. The
sword rose as of its own accord, cutting deep in between the wings.

The thing shrieked in agony, tumbling as it
struck, rolling over and over in a cloud of feathers and silvery blood. The
eagle beak snapped at the air, once, twice; the lion head roared and the ox
head bellowed loudly. And then the sword came down again and it was still.

He became aware that he was leaning on the
sword, putting all his weight on it, as though trying to pin the dead thing to
the stone of the yard. The sword was actually in the rock, and he had to lean back and pull hard to get it out. For
a while he stood where he was, trying to get his hammering heart under control.

Then he went to break the locks on the
doors and let the people out.

*************************

The third
one didn’t find him till he was halfway back to where he’d left the demon and
the beast.

But it was waiting when he turned the
corner to the main street, crouching where the blood trail started. It was big,
much bigger than the other two, and its body blazed with a light so strong that
he had to squint.

“Ah,” it said, “the knight.” It picked up
some of the bloody dust and rubbed it meditatively. “The knight who kills
angels.”

He said nothing.

“Why did you kill my angels, knight?” it
asked. It shuffled a little closer on its wingtips. “They did not harm you.”

“They were killing the people,” he said. “They
were killing them for no reason at all.”

“They had transgressed,” the thing replied.
It wasn’t looking at him directly, just studying the ball of bloody mud
meditatively. “It was sufficient.”

“The old people?” he asked. “The women? The
children? The babies in arms? They had all
transgressed?”

“It was ordered that they be destroyed,”
the thing said. “What more do you want?”

“Yes, I know what I’m saying. Whatever
ordered this is insane. Worse than insane.”

“And so...you’re on the other side. You’re
damned by your own word and deed.”

He shrugged. “I think I’ve been damned a
long time. I don’t even know what I am any more. Maybe I’m not even alive.”

“You’re alive enough to kill angels.” It
was looking at him now, its three visible heads – the ox, human and eagle – all
turned towards him. “How did you do that, I wonder? I have never met anyone who
could kill an angel before.”

He didn’t say anything. The thing’s eyes
rested on his sword.

“I see,” it said silkily. “They must have
underestimated you. But how could they have known?”

“What do you intend to do?” he asked it. “Your
friends are dead, and I have released the people – those of them who are left.
You could go away and let them mourn their dead and try and build their lives back again.”

“Ah, but that wouldn’t be obeying my
orders, would it? My insane orders,
as you put it.” It tilted the nearest head, as if thinking. “Now, what should I
do with you? You and that sword of yours.”

He waited, knowing that the thing was
playing with him, that it had already made its decision.

“I know,” it said brightly, and the next
moment it was gone. It didn’t flap into the air. It just disappeared.

He was still staring at the spot when a
tremendous blow from behind knocked him over. He went sprawling in the dust,
rolling over desperately, raising the sword, but too late. A huge foot came
down and crushed his sword arm against the dust.

The thing wasn’t a winged, four-headed
angel any longer, It was a man now, huge and bearded, his immense arms bulging
with muscle. He threw back his head and laughed as he raised his hands. Held in
them was a gigantic battle axe. A second more, and he would bring the axe whistling down with force enough to split helmet and skull in two.

Then something struck from the air, a red
blur, something that might have been a nude red-skinned woman with horns and a
bladed tail. The giant, already off balance, twisted desperately, but too late.
The thing in the air slammed into him, and was gone.

Slowly, like a great tree whose roots have
been cut away, the giant fell.

He fell straight on the steel knife the man
he had been about to kill had taken out of his boot. There was a gasp, a rush
of blood, and then nothing more.

The man on the ground struggled out from
under the giant’s carcass. There was no sign of a naked red woman with horns
and a tail.

In the distance, a crowd of the people he’d
released was approaching.

*************************

“Demon,” he said.

It had been days since he’d left the
village, and this was the first time he’d been able to bring himself to talk. “Demon.”

There was no reply. The beast’s horned head
nodded in the burnished sunshine.

“I know you’re there somewhere,” he said. “Even
if you don’t want to show yourself, you’re there. So listen to me, will you?

“I suppose I should thank you for saving
me. Or maybe I shouldn’t.” He paused. “If
death is still a possibility open to me, I would have rather died, even if it
meant an eternity of torment. But then the angel would have killed the people.
So maybe I should thank you after all.

“Of course,” he added, “from the moment it
took human form, it was doomed. It became vulnerable to you, and you could have
destroyed it by yourself, even if it had killed me. So why didn’t you just let
it kill me and then destroyed it? Is it because you like me a little? You like
me a little, don’t you?”